The other day I tried 2 different Firefox extensions that are supposed to be able to save live video as a file on my windows PC.I first tried "Video downloader" extension. It didn't work, so I tried another extension called "Video pirate" (Yes, video pirate was/is available on the Firefox extensions page).Neither one of these worked.I was trying to download the video of "Poker Superstars III" at NBC Sports, so I could play it back on my Zaurus later.http://www.nbcsports.com/poker/feature1.htmlThe video player in use at above site is Adobe Flash Player 9http://www.macromedia.com/software/flash/about/When I had the above 2 video download extensions installed in my Firefox browser, the videos would no longer play on the site.Instead, I would get one of the following 2 errors.1. Video not available, please select another video2. Error connecting to server.I know these videos were available, because I had just watched part of them a few minutes before installing these extensions.I tried, and tried to view any of the videos and decided the extensions were causing my problems with the site.Is there any way to "save" these videos to the hard drive, so I can view them later on my Zaurus?I had to uninstall both extensions and I also rebooted my Windows box. The videos still would not play on the site after this.So, I waited about an hour, then went back to the NBC site, and now the videos play fine.Does having these type of extensions just installed prevent videos from playing on a site such as NBC Sports?

The other day I tried 2 different Firefox extensions that are supposed to be able to save live video as a file on my windows PC.I first tried "Video downloader" extension. It didn't work, so I tried another extension called "Video pirate" (Yes, video pirate was/is available on the Firefox extensions page).Neither one of these worked.I was trying to download the video of "Poker Superstars III" at NBC Sports, so I could play it back on my Zaurus later.http://www.nbcsports.com/poker/feature1.htmlThe video player in use at above site is Adobe Flash Player 9http://www.macromedia.com/software/flash/about/When I had the above 2 video download extensions installed in my Firefox browser, the videos would no longer play on the site.Instead, I would get one of the following 2 errors.1. Video not available, please select another video2. Error connecting to server.I know these videos were available, because I had just watched part of them a few minutes before installing these extensions.I tried, and tried to view any of the videos and decided the extensions were causing my problems with the site.Is there any way to "save" these videos to the hard drive, so I can view them later on my Zaurus?I had to uninstall both extensions and I also rebooted my Windows box. The videos still would not play on the site after this.So, I waited about an hour, then went back to the NBC site, and now the videos play fine.Does having these type of extensions just installed prevent videos from playing on a site such as NBC Sports?

use Replay Media Catcher. It's not free though, but they have an eval version...

I tried the demo version, it records a portion of a video.It recorded a *.flv video. I recorded most of the first segment of "Poker Superstars III"After mucking around with trying to convert it to AVI (divx or xvid) I realized mplayer would play these *.flv videos natively.Converting to AVI resulted in some very poor conversions.

I can play this *.flv file in kino2 or with mplayer in the console.Both methods resulted in a very slow-mo version of this video.In kino, it just got to about 2 minutes into the video and it just stopped. It went back to the kino gui.

In commandline mplayer with -vo bvdd it played in very slow-mo and the video got so far behind the audio, that the poker players' audio was 2 to 4 hands ahead of the actual video.Then the audio started stuttering really bad.It's funny to watch cards, as they are being dealt, look like flying carpets, just floating in the air...The video didn't stop playing, like it did in kino.After closing the video in commandline, there was this message, repeated many times:Too many video packets in the buffer: (3056 in 8389738 bytes)Maybe you are playing a non-interleaved stream/file or codec failed?

I've had better results playing flv videos on the command line with mplayer using the flag -hardframedrop (I think that's right). I discover that when mplayer threw an error message full of suggestions. Watch a bit of your video on mplayer, kill it and then scroll up on the console messages. It sometimes still lags a bit on the audio, but if you fast forward a second or two, they realign.

I've had better results playing flv videos on the command line with mplayer using the flag -hardframedrop (I think that's right). I discover that when mplayer threw an error message full of suggestions. Watch a bit of your video on mplayer, kill it and then scroll up on the console messages. It sometimes still lags a bit on the audio, but if you fast forward a second or two, they realign.

Thanks for the tip jfv, but using -hardframedrop just makes this video freeze on the first frame and it never advances, but the audio advances.

You have taught me one thing though commandline -hardframedrop is the same as "Drop Frames" in Kino2 Look at screenshot.